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A Son Watches Mother Die
Ali Shaito implored his mother, Muntaha, to stay conscious as she
lay dying from shrapnel wounds.
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Dead Lay in Streets
Nineteen inhabitants of Beit Hanun were killed with malice
aforethought. There is no other way of describing the circumstances of
their killing. Someone who throws burning matches into a forest can't
claim he didn't mean to set it on fire, and anyone who bombards
residential neighborhoods with artillery can't claim he didn't mean to
kill innocent inhabitants.
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Israelis Apes Think Nothing Of It
Therefore it takes considerable gall and cynicism to dare to claim
that the Israel Defense Forces did not intend to kill inhabitants of
Beit Hanun. Even if there was a glitch in the balancing of the aiming
mechanism or in a component of the radar, a mistake in the input of
the data or a human error, the overwhelming, crucial, shocking fact is
that the IDF bombards helpless civilians. Even shells that are
supposedly aimed 200 meters from houses, into "open areas," are
intended to kill, and they do kill. In this respect, nothing new
happened on Wednesday morning in Gaza: The IDF has been behaving like
this for months now.
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Goes Back To The Israeli Government
But this isn't just a matter of "the IDF," "the government" or
"Israel" bearing the responsibility. It must be said explicitly: The
blame rests directly on people who hold official positions,
flesh-and-blood human beings, and they must pay the price of their
criminal responsibility for needless killing. Attorney Avigdor
Klagsbald caused the death of a woman and her child without anyone
imagining that he intended to hit them, but nevertheless he is sitting
in prison. And what about the killers of women and children in Beit
Hanun? Will they all be absolved? Will no one be tried? Will no one
even be reprimanded and shunned?
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Israeli Commander
GOC Southern Command Yoav Galant will say with exasperating
coolness that apparently there was "a problem with the battery's
targeting apparatus," without moving a facial muscle, and will that be
enough? Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh will say, "The IDF is
militarily responsible, but not morally responsible," and will he thus
exculpate himself?
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And who will bear the responsibility for the renewal of the terror
attacks? Only Hamas? Who will be accused of the tumble in Israel's status
and its depiction as a violent, leper state, and who will be judged for
the danger that hovers over world Jewry in the wake of the IDF's acts? The
electronic component that went on the blink in the radar?
No one is guilty in Israel. There is never anyone guilty in Israel. The
prime minister who is responsible for the brutal policy toward the
Palestinians, the defense minister who knew about and approved the
bombardments, the chief of staff, the chief of command and the commander
of the division who gave the orders to bombard - not one of them is
guilty. They will continue with the work of killing as though nothing has
happened: The sun shone, the system flourished and the ritual slaughterer
slaughtered. They will continue to pursue the routine of their daily
lives, accepted in society like anyone else, and remain in their posts
despite the blood on their hands. A few hours after the disaster, while
the Gaza Strip was still enveloped in sorrow and deep in shock, the air
force was already hastening to carry out another targeted killing, an
arrogant demonstration of just how much this disaster does not concern us.
Israel after the disaster was split: There were those who did their duty
and "expressed sorrow," like the prime minister and the defense minister,
and there were those who hastened with appalling insensitivity to cast the
responsibility onto the Palestinians, like the "moderate" foreign
minister, Tzipi Livni, and the deputy defense minister from the Labor
Party, Sneh. The silent majority did not bother to emerge from its yawning
indifference. The entertainment shows on television continued to make
people laugh, and one of the radio stations even broadcast, in a
demonstrable lack of taste, Sarit Hadad's song "You're a Big Gun."
Mourning, of course, did not descend on Israel, and there was not even a
single manifestation of genuine participation in the sorrow. It did not
occur to Israel to promise compensation to the families and it did not
provide help, apart from transferring some of the wounded to hospitals in
Israel. We provided more aid to the victims of the earthquake in Mexico,
even though there we didn't have a hand in the disaster. For the most
part, the media were not very disturbed by the killing and devoted less
attention to it than to the Gay Pride parade.
A day or two after the disaster it was totally forgotten and other affairs
are filling our lives. But it is impossible just to go on to the next item
on the agenda. This disaster is not an act of God. There are people who
are clearly responsible for it, and they must be brought to justice. The
fact that the International Court of Justice in The Hague still looks very
far from Israel, and the various "Halutzes" and "Galants" can still move
around freely in the world, because in Israel they forgive nearly
everything, does not mean that war crimes are not being committed here.
The IDF may well be a big gun, but an army that is responsible for
needless killing in such large dimensions, as in recent months in Lebanon
and in Gaza, is a failed and dangerous army that must urgently be
repaired. The Defense Forces are not only killing Arabs for no reason,
they are also directly endangering Israel's security, disgracing it in the
world and embroiling it again and again.
The heedless and arrogant reaction to such deeds contains a dangerous
moral message. If it is possible to dismiss mass killing with a wealth of
technical excuses, and not take any drastic measure against those who are
truly guilty of it, then Israel is saying that, as far as it is concerned,
nothing happened apart from the faulty component in the radar system or
the glitch in balancing the sights. But what happened at Beit Hanun, what
happened in Israel on the day after and what is continuing to happen in
Gaza day after day is a far more frightening distortion than the
calibrating of a gun sight.
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